The head of airline Emirates’ UK operations has expressed frustration that the United Arab Emirates (UAE) is still on the Government’s red travel list.
Divisional vice president Richard Jewsbury said he hopes the Gulf state’s low rate of coronavirus cases and strong vaccination programme will see it removed from the high-risk category soon.
People travelling from the UAE to the UK must enter a quarantine hotel for 11 nights at a cost of £1,750 for solo travellers due to the red list status, which has decimated passenger numbers.
UAE flag carrier Emirates operated around 20 flights a day from the UK before the outbreak of the virus, but that has been cut by around 80%.
Mr Jewsbury told the PA news agency that “the data coming out of the UAE is very good”.
The weekly rate of coronavirus cases per 100,000 people in the UAE for the week ending July 22 was 124, compared with 417 in the UK, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control.
Meanwhile, some 69% of the population in the UAE are fully vaccinated, which is among the highest proportion of any country in the world.
The decision to keep the UAE on the red list despite those figures is “frustrating”, Mr Jewsbury said.
He insisted that Emirates will “respect the Government process” and “accept their sovereign right to do what they see fit”.
But he noted Germany’s decision to put the UAE on its low-risk travel list, which he claimed highlights “the more cautious approach” of the UK.
“All we can do is stay engaged and flag up the data and hope that it’s acted upon.”
The UAE – which includes the cities of Dubai and Abu Dhabi – was added to the red list in late January.
Its addition came shortly after Home Secretary Priti Patel hit out at UK influencers visiting the country during the ban on non-essential foreign travel,…